On Saturday 18 September 2010, 01:02:57 danny wrote: > > The natural choice would be QToolButton of course, but did you also > > considered the surprising behavior change for your users (that don't > > expect those items being draggable..)? > > Thanks for the response. The natural question now, is how do I get from > the QToolBar to the QToolButton. I typically construct the toolbar via > addAction calls. I never construct a QToolButton directly to overload its > mousePressEvent. I don't actually know how to construct a QToolBar > directly from QToolButtons. > > Looking at the documentation, I don't know how to go from the QToolBar to > QToolButtons. Is QToolBar.widgetForAction() the right method? Does that > return the QToolButton? And if so, should I create an instance level > override of mousePressEvent. That seems unusual to me. Or, reversing the > question, how do I add an action to a QToolBar that has an overloaded > QToolButton.
You're going to subclass QToolButton, override mouse{Press,Move}Event and add them to the toolbar with QToolBar.addWidget(). It might be sufficient to connect the pressed signal to a startDrag method in your main window. Check the deleayedencoding example, I've send the other day. Just start over with a test script, that does nothing else. Present it here, when you're stuck. Pete _______________________________________________ PyQt mailing list PyQt@riverbankcomputing.com http://www.riverbankcomputing.com/mailman/listinfo/pyqt